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Chapter 30: Challenging the Postwar Order 1960-1991 Text pages 958-991 Détente • Leonid Brezhnev & Richard Nixon • The progressive relaxation of Cold War tensions. Cold War Tensions thaw Mayor of West Berlin 1957–1966, Chancellor of West Germany 1969– 1974, and leader of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) 1964–1987. • Ostpolitik • German for "new eastern policy” • refers to the normalization of relations between the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG, or West Germany) and Eastern Europe, particularly the German Democratic Republic • the policies were implemented beginning with Willy Brandt • won Brandt the Nobel Peace Prize in 1971. Willy Brandt • A West German Leader Apologizes for the Holocaust • In 1970 West German chancellor Willy Brandt knelt before the Jewish Heroes’ Monument in Warsaw, Poland, to ask forgiveness for the German mass murder of European Jews and other groups during the Second World War. Brandt’s action, captured in photo and film by the onlooking press, symbolized the chancellor’s policy of Ostpolitik, the normalization of relations between the East and West Blocs. (AP Images) The Helsinki Accords • Signed by thirty-five nations who agreed that Europe’s borders could not be changed by force and pledged to guarantee the human rights and political freedoms of their citizens. They represented the high point of détente. The Growing Counterculture Movement • Demographics • American Inspiration • The baby boom • The American Civil generation grew up in Rights movement an era of and student protests unprecedented on college campuses affluence, received in the United States better education, and inspired students in acted on concerns overcrowded Western about inequality and European universities social justice. to launch protests of their own. The New Left • A movement in western Europe and the United States that embraced an updated, romanticized version of Marxism. It attacked the conformity of consumer society and urged a lifestyle rebellion (“the personal is the political”) that included drug use, rock music, and sexual experimentation • The New Left embraced a new version of Marxism that could avoid the worst excesses of both capitalism and Soviet-style communism. Herbert Marcuse:” Father of the New Left”; associated with the Frankfurt School of critical theory The Sexual Revolution • – More young persons engaged in sexual experimentation (facilitated by the pill) and frank talk about sexuality, even if many of these persons still wanted to establish families based on traditional middle-class norms. • 1. more frank discussion about sexuality emerged. • 2. premarital sex became more common. • 3. homosexuality became more widely accepted. United States and Vietnam • The Geneva Accords temporarily divided the country into southern and northern zones. Eisenhower provided military aid, Kennedy sent 16,000 “military advisers,” and Johnson provided ½ million American troops and massive military aids, while pursuing a strategy of limited warfare. • U.S. was pursuing the policy of containment! • Criticism • In spite of initial support, an antiwar movement emerged on college campuses and student protesters joined forces with old-line Socialists, New Left intellectuals, and pacifists. The Vietcong’s Tet offensive, though a military failure for Communist forces, only increased criticism of the war in the west. United States and Vietnam • . American Withdrawal – President Nixon increased aerial bombardment, but suspended the draft and eventually reached a peace agreement that allowed America forces to withdraw. The south Vietnamese were forced in 1975 to accept a united country under a communist dictatorship. The 1960s in the East Bloc • Prague Spring • – Alexander Dubcek (1921–1992), a reformer but dedicated Communist, introduced “socialism with a human face” in January 1968. These reforms led to an invasion of 500,000 Soviet and Eastern European troops Connection across time: Prague Spring(1968) vs. Arab Spring(2010) • Prague Spring • period of political liberalization in Czechoslovakia during the era of its domination by the Soviet Union after World War II. It began on 5 January 1968, when reformist Alexander Dubček was elected the First Secretary of Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, and continued until 21 August when the Soviet Union and members of the Warsaw Pact invaded the country to halt the reforms. • Arab Spring • is a revolutionary wave of demonstrations and protests occurring in the Arab world that began on Saturday, 18 December 2010. • To date: Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, and Yemen; civil uprisings have erupted in Bahrain, and Syria, ] major protests have broken out in Algeria, Iraq, Jordan] Kuwait, Morocco, and Oman; and minor protests have occurred in Lebanon, Mauritania, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, and Western Sahara Connection across time: Prague Spring(1968) vs. Arab Spring(2010) • Prague Spring • Arab Spring demonstrations Brezhnev Doctrine (1968) Soviet policy doctrine, introduced at the Fifth Congress of the Polish United workers Party on November 13, 1968 “When forces that are hostile to socialism try to turn the development of some socialist country towards capitalism, it becomes not only a problem of the country concerned, But a common problem and concern of all socialist countries” Soviet Union had the right to intervene in any socialist country whenever it saw the need. Leadership of The Soviet union reserved to itself the right to define “socialism” and “capitalism.” No country was allowed to leave Warsaw pact or to distribute that nations communist party’s monopoly on power Used to justify the invasion of Czechoslovakia that terminated the Prague Spring in 1968 and Afghanistan in 1979 Sinatra doctrine replaces the Brezhnev doctrine in 1988 • "Sinatra Doctrine" was the name that the Soviet government of Mikhail Gorbachev used jokingly to describe its policy of allowing neighboring Warsaw Pact nations to determine their own internal affairs. The name alluded to the Frank Sinatra song "My Way"—the Soviet Union was allowing these nations to go their own way. The Supermarket Revolution LIVING IN THE PAST-pg. 964 OPEC-The Arab-led Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries • was founded in Baghdad, Iraq, with the signing of an agreement in September 1960 by five countries namely Islamic Republic of Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. They were to become the Founder Members of the Organization. • has maintained its headquarters in Vienna since 1965 • later joined by Qatar (1961), Indonesia (1962), Libya (1962), the United Arab Emirates (1967), Algeria (1969), Nigeria (1971), Ecuador (1973), Gabon (1975) and Angola (2007). OPEC and the Oil Crisis • Cheap oil had helped fuel the postwar economic boom. In 1973 during the fourth Arab-Israeli war, the Arab-led OPEC declared an embargo on oil shipments to the United States. Unemployment rose, inflation soared, while productivity and living standards fell. The Conservative Backlash • • • 1. 2. 3. Neoliberalism A philosophy with distant roots in the laissez-faire policies of 19th century liberals that argued that government should cut social services (housing, education, health insurance), limit business subsidies, retreat from regulation, and privatize state managed industries (transportation and communication industries). Neoliberals embraced all of the following ideas reduced government spending on social services. a reduction in government regulations on business. the privatization of state-managed industries. Margaret Thatcher: longest-serving (1979–1990) British prime minister of the 20th century, and the only woman ever to have held the post. • The British prime minister who pushed through freemarket policies, cut spending on health care, education and public housing, reduced taxes, and privatized government-run enterprises. In the short term, this led to heavy unemployment, a widening gap between rich and poor, and occasional riots. Margaret Thatcher-pg. 973 Individuals in Society: “Iron Lady” (video clip) She is one of the dominant political figures of 20th century Britain, and Thatcherism continues to have a huge influence. Thatcherism claims to promote low inflation, the small state and free markets through tight control of the money supply, privatization and constraints on the labour movement. Ronald Reagan: 40th President of the United States, serving from 1981 to 1989 • American president and leader of the American neoconservative movement who cut taxes and increased military spending, but failed to limit government spending. • Reaganomics in the United States, is often compared to Thatcherism. This was known as trickle-down economic 1. Reduce the growth of government spending 2. Reduce income tax and capital gains tax 3. Reduce government regulation of economy 4. Control money supply to reduce inflation Helmut Kohl • Chancellor of Germany from 1982 to 1998 (of West Germany between 1982 and 1990 and of the reunited Germany between 1990 and 1998) and the chairman of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) from 1973 to 1998. His 16-year tenure was the longest of any German chancellor since Otto von Bismarck and oversaw the end of the Cold War and the German reunification. Kohl is widely regarded as one of the main architects of the German reunification and, together with French President François Mitterrand, the Maastricht Treaty, which contributed to the creation of the European Union. Helmut Kohl, con’t • German chancellor (b. 1930) who cut taxes and government spending but helped lead the German economy to greater growth. He agreed to deploy new U.S. missiles on West German territory and presided over the reunification of Germany. Kohl & Reagan Kohl and Reagan View the Berlin Wall Protected by a sheet of bulletproof glass, West German chancellor Helmut Kohl (right) and U.S. president Ronald Reagan look over the Berlin Wall into East Germany from the balcony of the West German Parliament building during Reagan’s state visit in June 1987. In a famous speech made during the trip, Reagan challenged Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to “tear down this wall!” and liberalize the East Bloc. (Dick Halstead/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images) Oct. 3, 1990-Reunification of Germany • The peaceful reunification of Germany accelerated the pace of agreements to liquidate the Cold War. • *Video clip Francois Mitterand • French president and Socialist party leader elected in 1981 who led France back to the left by, unsuccessfully and temporarily, nationalizing certain industries and leading a program of public investment. Maastricht Treaty • Maastricht is officially known as the Treaty of the European Union and with it the EU came into existence for the first time. • also the blueprint for what was to be Europe's biggest project for the next decade - economic and monetary union • it created the European Union and led to the creation of the single European currency, the euro • it was signed on 7 February 1992 and went into force on 1 November 1993. euro • official currency of the eurozone: 17 of the 27 member states of the European Union • he second largest reserve currency as well as the second most traded currency in the world after the United States dollar • Euro coins and banknotes entered circulation on 1 January 2002 Challenges and Victories for Women • The Feminist Movement • – Emerged in response to changing patterns of motherhood and paid work, to a new critique of gender relations by intellectuals, and to lessons learned from the civil rights and protest movements of the 1960s. The Feminist Critique • Simone de Beauvoir (1908-1986) • French philosopher and author of The Second Sex who argued that women had been trapped by inflexible and limiting conditions and could become completely free persons only through self-assertive creativity and escaping the gender roles created for them by men. The Feminist Critique • Betty Friedan (1921-2006) • American writer and author of the Feminine Mystique (1963), who called attention to the stifling aspects of women’s domestic life and helped found the National Organization of Women (NOW) to press for women’s rights. Feminist movement • Pushed for laws against discrimination, equal pay for equal work, maternity leave, the right to divorce, and legalized abortion and protection from rape and physical violence. Some members of the feminist movement were also active in the antinuclear peace movement of the early 1980s which emerged in response to Reagan’s military buildup. Rise of the Environmental Movement • Rachel Carson • American marine biologist and conservationist whose writings are credited with advancing the global environmental movement • Author of Silent Spring (1962), which had a seminal impact on the emerging environmental movement. The Ecological Agenda • It sought to lessen the effects of industrial development on the environment (dying forest, oil spills, nuclear waste) and to link local environmental issues to poverty, inequality, and violence on a global scale. Denmark, March 1969 student protesters at the University of Copenhagen took over a scientific conference on natural history. They locked the conference hall doors, sprayed the professors in attendance with polluted lake water, and held up an oil-doused duck, shouting, “Come and save it ...you talk about pollution, why don’t you do anything about it!” Environmental Groups • Included Greenpeace, the Green Party—which was founded in 1979 in West Germany and elected members to parliament in the 1983 elections—and Green Parties in Belgium, the United States, Italy, and Sweden. Separatism and Right-Wing Extremism • The ETA-short for Basque Homeland and Freedom • armed Basque nationalist and separatist organization. The group was founded in 1959 • Used bombings and assassinations to win territorial independence for a Basque homeland in northern Spain Separatism and Right-Wing Extremism • Provisional Irish Republican • 1972, British soldiers Army (IRA) shot and killed thirteen demonstrators, who had • Catholic paramilitary been protesting antiorganization in Northern Catholic discrimination, Ireland that attacked in the town of Derry, and soldiers and civilians in the violence escalated Britain for thirty years. • Next thirty years the IRA attacked soldiers and civilians in Northern Ireland and in Britain itself. IRA Reform Movements in Czechoslovakia and Poland • Reformists avoided direct challenges to government leaders and reforming the Communist party itself but worked to build civil society from below and to create a new realm of freedom beyond formal politics. Vaclav Havel • Havel was the ninth and last president of Czechoslovakia (1989– 1992) and the first president of the Czech Republic (1993–2003) • one of the signatories of the Charter 77 manifesto, which criticized the government for ignoring the human rights provisions of the Helsinki Accords and for policies of censorship and environmental pollution. Vaclav Havel, Former Czech President, Dies at 75-New York Times • Vaclav Havel, the Czech writer and dissident whose eloquent dissections of Communist rule helped to destroy it in revolutions that brought down the Berlin Wall and swept Mr. Havel himself into power, died on18 December 2011 Karol Wotyla • The archbishop of Krakow who became Pope John Paul II in 1978 and galvanized the Polish nation when the economy had been in a nosedive • reigned as Pope of the from 1978 until his death in 2005. He was the second-longest serving Pope in history and the first non-Italian since 1523 • Pope John Paul II challenged the Communist regime in Poland by preaching love of Christ and country and the inalienable rights of man. Poland & Solidarity • Outlawed Polish trade union that worked for workers’ rights and political reform throughout the 1980s. • Led by Lenin Shipyards electrician and devout Catholic Lech Walesa • Poland will lead the way in the 1989 revolutions! Solidarity • Polish labor union led by Lech Walesa that organized strikes in 1980 and 1981 calling for civil liberties and cultural and intellectual freedoms. When the Communist leader Wojciech Jaruzelski declared martial law, it was driven underground. It was reborn toward the end of the decade. • Outlawed and driven underground, Solidarity survived in part because of the government’s unwillingness (and probably its inability) to impose fullscale terror. • Solidarity’s challenge encouraged fresh thinking in the Soviet Union, ever the key to lasting change in the Eastern bloc. Wojciech Jaruzelski • Last Communist leader of Poland from 1981 to 1989, P.M. from 1981 to 1985 and the country's head of state from 1985 to 1990 From Détente Back to Cold War • The End of Détente • – Détente faded when the USSR ignored the human rights provisions of the Helsinki agreement, pushed for political gains and revolutions in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and invaded Afghanistan in December, 1979. Afghanistan (1978- -1989) Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979 USSR’ ’s “Vietnam” Resistance led by U.S. supported Osama Bin Laden---trained by the U.S.!!!!!!! Soviets eventually successful in creating successful in creating a puppet government Overthrown by the Taliban in 1996 The American Response • – After Pres. Jimmy Carter unsuccessfully tried to lead NATO beyond verbal condemnation, Reagan strengthened the American military buildup, anathematized the Soviet Union as the “evil empire,” and deployed short-range nuclear missiles in Western Europe. • Ronald Reagan is synonymous with America in the 1980s, Reagan attacked the Soviet Union head on, referring to them as the “Evil Empire”. He increased defense spending, and challenged the Soviets to elevate the Arms Race knowing they could not compete with American productivity, paving the way for Cold War victory. President from 1980 - 1988 Gorbachev's Reforms in the Soviet Union • served as General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1985 until 1991, and as the last head of state of the Soviet Union, having served from 1988 until its dissolution in 1991. He was the only general secretary in the history of the Soviet Union to have been born during the Communist rule. Gorbachev • Soviet leader and reformer who believed in Communism but realized it was failing to keep up with Western economic and technological developments. He attacked corruption and incompetence in the bureaucracy. Will be remembered as the man that launched one the most dramatic revolutions in the 20th Century!! Glasnost (1985) He encouraged Soviet citizens to discuss ways to improve society Perestroika (1986) Idea of economic restructuring Goal wasn’t to overthrow communism but to make it work more efficiently Democratization (1987) Gorbachev allowed for free elections, the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan, a halt to the arms race with the United States, the encouragement of reform movements in Poland and Hungary, and the end of the Brezhnev doctrines · Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev began a policy called glasnost, in which he allowed more freedom of speech and the press. · Gorbachev also signed an arms control treaty, called the INF Treaty, with Pres. Reagan in 1987. · Eventually, however, Gorbachev was forced to resign in 1991, and the Soviet Union ceased to exist. “Mr. Gorbachev: tear down this wall!” Video clip INF (1987) Dec. 1987- he and Ronald Reagan signed the Intermediate range Nuclear Forces treaty This banned nuclear missiles range of 300-3,400 miles “Star Wars” 1988 Reagan announced SDI (Strategic Defense Initiative) to protect America against enemy missiles but was never put into effect Reunification of Germany (1990 In 1990 Gorbachev is awarded the Nobel peace prize for his leading role in the peace process which today characterizes important parts of the international community. August Coup (1991) Fall of Communism (1991) Dec. 25, 1991—Gorbachev resigns CIS Gorbachev • In 1990 Mikhail Gorbachev won the Nobel Peace Prize for helping to end the Cold War. Time Magazine named him Man of the Year and Man of the Decade. Gorbachev, today • On 27 March 2009, Gorbachev visited Eureka College in Eureka, Illinois which is the alma mater of former president Ronald Reagan. He toured the campus and later traveled to Peoria, Illinois as the keynote speaker at the Reagan Day Dinner. • To commemorate the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, Gorbachev accompanied former Polish leader Lech Walesa and German Chancellor Angela Merkel at a celebration in Berlin on 9 November 2009 Gorbachev (right) being introduced to Barack Obama by Joe Biden, 20 March 2009 1989 Reform movements The Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe-Revolutions of 1989! • POLAND—leads the way! • After a renewal of widespread labor unrest in 1988, Poland was at the brink of economic collapse. Solidarity was legalized in early 1989, the government held free elections in June, Solidarity secured a majority parliamentary seats, and Tadeusz Mazowiecki (b. 1927) became Poland’s new non-Communist prime minister. The new government eliminated the secret police and Communist ministers in the government. It also applied economic shock therapy to mark a clean break with state planning. Shock Therapy • Solidarity-led government’s radical take on economic affairs that abruptly ended state planning and moved to market mechanisms and private property • the sudden release of price and currency controls, withdrawal of state subsidies, and immediate trade liberalization within a country, usually also including large scale privatization of previously public owned assets. The Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe-Revolutions of 1989! • HUNGARY • The Hungarian Communist party agreed to hold free elections in March 1990 and to gain support opened their border to East Germany and tore down the barbed wire border with Austria. Tens of thousands of East German “vacationers” entered the country en route to Austria and resettlement in West Germany. • In a desperate attempt to stabilize the situation, the East German government opened the Berlin Wall in November 1989, and people danced for joy atop that grim symbol of the prison state. jános kádár permitted liberalization of the rigid planned economy The Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe • EAST GERMANY • A powerful protest movement emerged, consisting of intellectuals, environmentalists, and Protestant ministers. To stabilize the situation, the government opened the Berlin Wall in November, 1989. A reform government took power and scheduled free elections. The Fall of the Berlin Wall The sudden and unanticipated opening of the Berlin Wall in 1989 dramatized the spectacular fall of communism throughout east-central Europe. Built on the orders of the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev in 1961, the hated barrier had stopped the flow of refugees from East Germany to West Germany. Over the twenty-eight years of its existence, the Wall came to symbolize the limits on personal freedom enforced by Communist dictatorships. Velvet Revolution—collapse of communism in Czechoslovakia • non-violent revolution in Czechoslovakia that took place from November 17 to December 29, 1989 • it saw to the collapse of the party's control of the country, and the subsequent conversion from Czech Stalinism to capitalism The Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe--Romania • The dictator, Nicolae Ceausescu (1918-1989) was overthrown by force and executed by a military court. • On Christmas Day, 25 December, the two were tried in a brief show trial and sentenced to death by a military court on charges ranging from illegal gathering of wealth to genocide, and were executed in Târgovişte • Video clip German Unification and the End of the Cold War • 1. After the wall was opened, more than half of the population entered West Germany and bore hopes of reuniting with families in the west. • 3. International Agreement – Gorbachev, Thatcher and Bush agreed to German unity in • 2. Helmut Kohl – The German exchange for German chancellor prepared a ten-point loans to the Soviet plan to exploit the historical moment. He promised East Union and recognition German citizens a 1-1 of its existing borders. currency exchange, which led to the victory of parties with pro-unification platforms in March 1990. The Disintegration of the Soviet Union 1. Electoral Defeats: The Communist party suffered stunning defeats in the leading cities of the Russian Soviet republic and in Lithuania, whose parliament and president declared independence. Gorbachev declared an embargo but refused to use force against the separatist government. . Disintegration of the USSR Boris Yeltsin (1931–2007) • A radical reform communist purged by party conservatives in 1987 who embraced the democratic movement and was elected parliamentary leader in May 1990. He announced that Russia would declare its independence from the Soviet Union. Disintegration of the USSR • a gang of hard-liners • 3. The Coup kidnapped Gorbachev and • Gorbachev was kidnapped his family and tried to seize by a group of hard-liners control of the government. (Communists!) in August It failed and in a short 1991. amount of time he was rescued and put back as head of the Soviet Union. The leaders of this coup wanted to preserve communist power, state ownership, and the multinational Soviet Union, but instead destroyed all three. Disintegration of the USSR • Communist hard-liner’s attempted to seize the Soviet government but failed in the wake of massive popular resistance that rallied around Yeltsin, who had been elected president of the Russian Soviet Republic. …the collapse of the USSR • Yeltsin and his allies declared Russia independent, withdrew from the USSR and renamed the Russian Soviet Republic the Russian Federation. All of the other Soviet republics also left. June 12, 1991 Elected President won 57% of the popular vote in democratic presidential election Shock Therapy ( Jan. 1992) Shift from command economy to a free market economy Chechnya (1991-1994) Largely Muslim area in S. Western Russia declared its independence in 1991 but Yeltsin denied the regions right to secede 1994- sent 40,000troops into the “breakaway republic” where they ruined the capital city of Grozny. This didn’t make Yeltsin popular so he looked to end this & signed a treaty. Yeltsin won re-election in 1996. Dec. 8, 1991-Origin of the CIS When elected leaders of Russia, Ukraine, Belarus signed an agreement forming a new association to replace the crumbling Soviet Union. They were joined by others and this formally came into begin on Dec. 21, 1991. An alcoholic, Yeltsin personal and health problems received a lot of attention in the world press Yeltsin Resigned Dec. 31, 1999 naming Vladimir Putin as Acting President until new elections Aug. 1999- appointed Prime Minister of the Russian Government by Pres. Boris Yelstin Yelstin resigned Dec. 31, 1999 and appointed Putin to president of Russia March 26, 2000 open election A typical Russian leader: young & sports enthusiast Unlike his predecessor , he is less enthusiastic about erasing Russia’s Soviet past Re- elected on 2004 In his later years, the philosophy of Putin’s administration has been described as “sovereign democracy”-> policy of the president must all be supported by the popular majority in Russia itself & not be governed from outside of the country. Such popular support constitutes the founding principle of a democratic society. President Vladimir Putin …He’s back! • President Barack Obama on March 9th, called Russia’s president-elect Vladimir Putin to congratulate him, inaugurating a relationship that may decide the fate of “reset” US relations with the Kremlin. • Putin was inaugurated May 7, 2012